Get in touch with Joe Hickson, hicksonj. I believe he charged me $750?
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I am thinking about getting my green card. When you buy an NFA firearm through a trust is there anything different about the transaction, other than the firearm is owned by the trust?
I'm wondering about the pros and cons?
Exactly.One pro is that if something happens to you the trust can keep the NFA items without $200/item transfer provided the individual can legally possess the items in the trust. This might mean that they need a green card and/or LTC.
A trust may also, depending on how it is constructed, allow legal access to that item by more than one person. The one big suck-ness of individual NFA registrations is nobody can possess that item
without you being present, generally speaking.
For example if an MG is owned by a corporation, any of the officers of the corp can legally possess it, IIRC. (Obviously in MA all the officers would have to have green cards, but that's state level crap. )
A trust may be able to effectuate similar privileges if it is constructed correctly.
This is a question I had actually. I just bought an SBR KRISS Super V and am starting the paperwork to get it transferred to me via a Trust. I know I can add other people to the trust, my question is whether that trust can have different "property" in different states, possessed by different trustees. For example, I want to have myself, my wife, my brother and my brother-in-law as trustees in the trust. In MA, I can have Machine guns and SBR's, but no suppressors. In OR (where I am from and where my brother lives), he can have anything he wants (a suppressed, SBR MG as long as we get all the stamps). Can we build one trust to handle all of those different possiblities? I know that if we transferred something from MA to OR, we'd have to get ATF approval and we couldn't transfer something not legal in the ending state (no suppressors in MA for example). Or are Trusts state only entities that the feds treat on a state by state basis.
I know a lot of you are thinking "what is he thinking trusting that many people with his property" but our family is tight, the day I worry about this going badly is the day I decide I don't want to be on this earth any more. Not everyone has that kind of a relationship, but we do and we can do this without any danger for myself or my family.
Any opinions are appreciated and your time taken to read this is appreciated in advance as well.
Cheers
STAC
I don't think anyone here is going to touch this one. You need to run this by a trust lawyer who has knowledge of the NFA.
The beneficiary(s) (notice here not the trust) maintains equitable title to the trust property. Equitable title refers to the benefits and enjoyment of that property.
If Mr. O personally writes a check or charges (on his personal charge card) the purchase to acquire an NFA firearm and takes possession of the NFA item (after approval of all NFA forms), there was most likely two (yes 2: shop to O and O to O as trustee of the O NFA Trust) transfers involved in the transaction, and both were most likely illegal! Don't buy for the other guy (even if he is a trust)! To avoid this, O should have (1) opened a bank account, in the name of O as trustee for the O NFA Trust; (2) Gifted money to O as trustee for the O NFA Trust; and (3) write a check from said account to the seller party/dealer.
I think what he is talking about is basically just laying down a bed of TP on the rim of the legal toilet, so to speak.
Why would they need to be the same person? Normally the trustee is in control of the trust and the property in the trust so the beneficiary is only in control if the trustee is incapacitated or otherwise unable to make decisions for the trust.Ok I'm confused, Ive read so much info on this. In an NFA trust, can the trustee and the first beneficiary be the same person??
Thanks
I believe the Settlor is in charge as long as he is still alive or maintains control fo the (revocable) trust.
While we're all playing amateur attorneys here, this is a perfect example of why its worthwhile to have your trust drawn up by an atty.
Really, Fed law being dictated by state law on NFA issues.......never liked the trust route.
Really, Fed law being dictated by state law on NFA issues.......never liked the trust route.